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Complaint - Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP PDF

23 Pages·2015·0.07 MB·English
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Preview Complaint - Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK x MANISHKUMAR KHUNT, Individually and : Civil Action No. on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated, : : CLASS ACTION Plaintiff, : COMPLAINT FOR VIOLATIONS OF THE : vs. FEDERAL SECURITIES LAWS : : ALIBABA GROUP HOLDING LIMITED, : JACK YUN MA, JOSEPH C. TSAI, : JONATHAN ZHAOXI LU and MAGGIE WEI : DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL WU, : : Defendants. : x Plaintiff, Manishkumar Khunt, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, by plaintiff’s undersigned attorneys, for plaintiff’s complaint against defendants, alleges the following based upon personal knowledge as to plaintiff and plaintiff’s own acts, and upon information and belief as to all other matters based on the investigation conducted by and through plaintiff’s attorneys, which included, among other things, a review of Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) filings by Alibaba Group Holding Limited (“Alibaba” or the “Company”), as well as media reports about the Company and Company press releases. Plaintiff believes that substantial additional evidentiary support will exist for the allegations set forth herein after a reasonable opportunity for discovery. NATURE OF THE ACTION 1. This is a securities class action on behalf of all persons who purchased Alibaba American Depositary Shares (“ADSs”) between October 21, 2014 and January 28, 2015, inclusive (the “Class Period”), against Alibaba and certain of its officers and/or directors for violations of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“1934 Act”). 2. Defendant Alibaba is a China-based online and mobile commerce company in retail and wholesale trade, as well as cloud computing and other services. Alibaba represents that it is “the largest online and mobile commerce company in the world in terms of gross merchandise volume” in 2013. The Company hosts an online sales platform for third parties and does not engage in any direct sales, compete with merchants or hold inventory. 3. During the Class Period, Defendants issued materially false and misleading statements regarding the soundness of the Company’s business operations, the strength of its financial prospects and concealing substantial ongoing regulatory scrutiny. Specifically, Alibaba failed to disclose that Company executives had met with China’s State Administration of Industry and Commerce (“SAIC”) in July 2014, just two months before Alibaba’s $25+ billion initial public offering in the United States (the “IPO”), and that regulators had then brought to Alibaba’s attention a variety of highly dubious – even illegal – business practices that the SAIC advised Alibaba it was then actively clamping down on and which threatened the core of Alibaba’s business, including:  The rampant sale of counterfeit goods, including fake cigarettes, alcohol and branded handbags, by vendors on Alibaba’s third-party marketplace platform;  The sale of restricted weapons and other forbidden items on Alibaba’s third-party marketplace platform;  That Alibaba staffers had taken bribes from merchants and others seeking help to boost their search rankings and to get advertising space;  That Alibaba ignored the practice by some vendors of faking transactions to make their sales volumes appear higher;  That Company officials did nothing to stop merchants from using tactics such as false and misleading advertising; and  Accused Alibaba of alleged anticompetitive behavior such as forbidding merchants to participate in rival sites’ promotions. 4. Prior to the disclosure of the adverse facts detailed above, Alibaba and certain “selling shareholders” sold more than 368 million ADSs in the IPO at $68 each, raising more than $25 billion. Selling shareholders included two of Alibaba’s co-founders, Executive Chairman of the Board Jack Yun Ma (“Ma”), who sold more than 12.75 million shares, and Vice Chairman of the Board Joseph C. Tsai (“Tsai”), who sold another more than 4.25 million shares. Throughout the Class Period, Alibaba’s ADSs continued trading at ever-increasing, artificially inflated prices reaching a Class Period high of $120 each in intraday trading on November 13, 2014. 5. On January 28, 2015, before the opening of trading, various members of the financial media reported that SAIC, China’s main corporate regulator, had released a white paper accusing Alibaba of engaging in the very illegal conduct disclosed to Alibaba executives in July 2014. - 2 - 6. On this news, the price of Alibaba ADSs dropped 4%, or $4.49 per ADS, closing at $102.94 per ADS on January 28th, on unusually high volume of approximately 42 million shares trading. 7. Then, on January 29, 2015, before the market opened, Alibaba issued a press release announcing its financial results for the fourth quarter 2014 (“4Q 2014”) ended December 31, 2014. The Company reported revenues of just $4.22 billion for the 4Q 2014, significantly under-achieving the $4.45 billion target defendants had led the investment community to expect based on Alibaba’s bullish statements throughout the Class Period concerning its ongoing purported strong revenue growth. The Company also disclosed that its profits had fallen to $964 million, or 37 cents per share, a 28% decline from the financial results for the fourth quarter 2013 (“4Q 2013”), a decline Alibaba largely attributed to expenses from giving shares to employees. The Company also attributed challenges generating revenues from transactions on its mobile platforms, where advertising is less profitable than on personal computers, and which comprised a larger percentage of sales in the quarter than in the previous quarter. 8. As a result of these disclosures, the price of Alibaba ADSs plummeted another $8.64 per ADS to close at $89.81 per ADS on January 29, 2015, a one-day decline of approximately 9%, again on extremely unusually high volume of more than 76.3 million shares trading. The two declines collectively reduced the price of Alibaba ADSs more than 25% from its Class Period high, erasing more than $11 billion in market capitalization. JURISDICTION AND VENUE 9. The claims asserted herein arise under and pursuant to §§10(b) and 20(a) of the 1934 Act [15 U.S.C. §§78j(b) and 78t(a)] and Rule 10b-5 promulgated thereunder by the SEC [17 C.F.R. §240.10b-5]. - 3 - 10. This Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter of this action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §1331 and §27 of the 1934 Act. 11. Venue is proper in this District pursuant to §27 of the 1934 Act and 28 U.S.C. §1391(b). According to the IPO Prospectus, Alibaba “appointed Corporation Service Company, located at 1180 Avenue of the Americas, Suite 210, New York, New York 10036 as [its] agent to receive service of process with respect to any action brought against us in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York under the federal securities laws of the United States.” The ADRs IPO’d and trade on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”) located in this District. The roadshow used to sell the IPO took place, in large part, in the borough of Manhattan. The Company’s U.S. legal counsel, the underwriters who conducted the IPO and the underwriters’ counsel are all largely located in this District and carried out the IPO in this District. Many of the acts charged herein, including the preparation and dissemination of materially false and misleading information, occurred in substantial part in this District. 12. In connection with the acts alleged in this complaint, defendants, directly or indirectly, used the means and instrumentalities of interstate commerce, including, but not limited to, the mails, interstate telephone communications and the facilities of the NYSE stock market. PARTIES 13. Plaintiff Manishkumar Khunt acquired Alibaba ADSs as set forth in the attached certification and has been damaged thereby. 14. Defendant Alibaba is a China-based online and mobile commerce company in retail and wholesale trade, as well as cloud computing and other services. Alibaba ADSs trade in the United States on the NYSE, an efficient market, under the ticker symbol “BABA.” The Company had more than 386 million ADSs issued and trading in the U.S. as of the date of its IPO. - 4 - 15. Defendant Ma, the lead founder of Alibaba is, and at all relevant time was, the Company’s Executive Chairman of the Board. 16. Defendant Tsai, co-founder of Alibaba, is, and at all relevant time was, Executive Vice Chairman of the Board of the Company. 17. Defendant Jonathan Zhaoxi Lu (“Lu”) is, and at all relevant times was, Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”) and a director of the Company. 18. Defendant Maggie Wei Wu (“Wu”) was, at all relevant times, Chief Financial Officer (“CFO”) of the Company. 19. The defendants referenced above in ¶¶15-18 are referred to herein as the “Individual Defendants.” The Individual Defendants made, or caused to be made, false statements which caused the prices of Alibaba’s ADSs to be artificially inflated during the Class Period. 20. The Individual Defendants, because of their positions with the Company, possessed the power and authority to control the contents of Alibaba’s quarterly reports, shareholder letters, press releases and presentations to securities analysts, money and portfolio managers and institutional investors, i.e., the market. They were provided with copies of the Company’s reports and press releases alleged herein to be misleading prior to or shortly after their issuance and had the ability and opportunity to prevent their issuance or cause them to be corrected. Because of their positions with the Company, and their access to material non-public information available to them but not to the public, the Individual Defendants knew that the adverse facts specified herein had not been disclosed to and were being concealed from the public, and that the positive representations being made were then materially false and misleading. The Individual Defendants are liable for the false and misleading statements pleaded herein. - 5 - 21. Defendants are liable for: (i) making false statements; or (ii) failing to disclose adverse facts known to them about Alibaba. Defendants’ fraudulent scheme and course of business that operated as a fraud or deceit on purchasers of Alibaba ADSs was a success, as it: (i) deceived the investing public regarding Alibaba’s prospects and business; (ii) artificially inflated the prices of Alibaba ADSs; (iii) permitted Alibaba and the selling shareholders to raise more than $25 billion in the IPO and Alibaba to raise more than $8 billion in its Class Period private debt placement; and (iv) caused plaintiff and other members of the Class to purchase Alibaba ADSs at inflated prices. BACKGROUND 22. Alibaba, founded in 1999, is a China-based online and mobile commerce company in retail and wholesale trade, as well as cloud computing and other services. The Company provides technology and services to enable consumers, merchants, and other participants to conduct commerce in what it calls its “ecosystem.” The Company operates Taobao Marketplace, an online shopping destination, Tmall, a third-party platform for brands and retailers and Juhuasuan. The Company represents that it provides the fundamental technology infrastructure and marketing reach to help businesses leverage the power of the Internet to establish an online presence and conduct commerce with consumers and businesses. 23. In July 2014, two months before its IPO, Alibaba executives met with China’s SAIC during which meeting the regulators brought to Alibaba’s attention a variety of highly dubious – even illegal – business practices that the SAIC advised Alibaba it was then actively clamping down on and which threatened the core of Alibaba’s business, including:  The rampant sale of counterfeit goods, including fake cigarettes, alcohol and branded handbags, by vendors on Alibaba’s third-party marketplace platform;  The sale of restricted weapons and other forbidden items on Alibaba’s third-party marketplace platform; - 6 -  That Alibaba staffers had taken bribes from merchants and others seeking help to boost their search rankings and to get advertising space;  That Alibaba ignored the practice by some vendors of faking transactions to make their sales volumes appear higher;  That Company officials did nothing to stop merchants from using tactics such as false and misleading advertising; and  Accused Alibaba of alleged anticompetitive behavior such as forbidding merchants to participate in rival sites’ promotions. DEFENDANTS’ MATERIALLY FALSE AND MISLEADING PRE-CLASS PERIOD STATEMENTS THAT REMAINED LIVE AND UNCORRECTED IN THE MARKET THROUGHOUT THE CLASS PERIOD AND CLASS PERIOD MISSTATEMENTS 24. On May 6, 2014, Alibaba filed with the SEC a Registration Statement on Form F-1, which would later be utilized for the IPO following several amendments in response to comments by the SEC. Each of the Individual Defendants signed the Registration Statement. On September 18, 2014, the SEC declared the Registration Statement effective. On or about September 19, 2014, Alibaba priced the IPO at $68 per ADS and filed the final Prospectus for the IPO on September 22, 2014, which forms part of the Registration Statement (collectively, the “Registration Statement”). 25. Concerning the purported integrity of Alibaba’s third-party marketplace portal – or its “growing ecosystem” – and the legitimacy of the products being sold there, the Registration Statement stated in pertinent part as follows: We have been a leader in developing online marketplace standards in China. Given the scale we have been able to achieve, an ecosystem has developed around our platform that consists of buyers, sellers, third-party service providers, strategic alliance partners, and investee companies. Our platform and the role we play in connecting buyers and sellers and making it possible for them to do business anytime and anywhere is at the nexus of this ecosystem. Much of our effort, our time and our energy is spent on initiatives that are for the greater good of the ecosystem and the various participants in it. We feel a strong responsibility for the continued development of the ecosystem and we take ownership for this development. Accordingly, we refer to this as “our ecosystem.” Our ecosystem has strong self-reinforcing network effects that benefit our marketplace participants, who are invested in our ecosystem’s growth and success. - 7 - Through this ecosystem, we have transformed how commerce is conducted in China and built a reputation as a trusted partner for the participants in our ecosystem.1 26. Emphasizing the Company’s purportedly “Trusted Brands,” the Registration Statement highlighted as a “Competitive Strength” that “Alibaba, Taobao, Tmall [were] well recognized and trusted brands in China,” that “[d]ue to the strength of these brands, a majority of [its] customers navigate[d] directly to [its] China retail marketplaces to find the products and services they [were] seeking instead of via third-party search engines.” 27. The Registration Statement also emphasized the Company’s “Thriving Ecosystem with Powerful Network Effects,” stating that it was “the steward of a thriving ecosystem, which provide[d] [it] with [certain] key advantages,” including that “interactions among participants create[d] value for one another as [its] ecosystem expand[ed] and generate[d] strong network effects.” 28. The Registration Statement further emphasized the Company’s “Data Insights” and “Third-party Platform Business Model” as competitive strengths, stating in pertinent part as follows:  Data Insights. Data from consumer behavior and transactions completed on our marketplaces and interactions among participants in our ecosystem provide us with valuable insights to help us and our sellers improve the buyer experience, operate more efficiently and create innovative products and services.  Third-party Platform Business Model. Our exclusively third-party platform business model allows us to scale rapidly without the risks and capital requirements of sourcing, merchandising and holding inventory borne by direct sales companies. This business model drives our profitability and strong cash flow, which give us the flexibility to further invest in and improve our platform, expand our ecosystem and aggressively invest in people, technology, innovative products and strategically important assets. 1 Emphasis added unless otherwise noted. - 8 - 29. Concerning ongoing revenue growth purportedly then being experienced, and importantly that which could be expected in the Company’s 4Q 2014, the Registration Statement stated, in pertinent part, as follows: Due to promotional events and higher consumer spending in the quarters ended June 30 and December 31, merchants are inclined to allocate more of their marketing spending during these periods to compete for and attract this consumer spending, which therefore drives revenue growth during those periods disproportionately to GMV growth and because increased demand for such services also increases pricing. 30. Pursuant to Item 303 of Regulation S-K [17 C.F.R. §229.303], and the SEC’s related interpretive releases thereto, including any known trends, issuers are required to disclose events or uncertainties that have had or are reasonably likely to cause the registrant’s financial information not to be indicative of future operating results. Prior to the IPO, Alibaba and SAIC had met and the Company was advised that Alibaba was engaging in a proliferation of unscrupulous-if not illegal- business practices. The adverse events and uncertainties associated with this meeting and the practices discussed at the meeting were reasonably likely to have a material impact on Alibaba’s continuing operations and, therefore, were required to be disclosed in the Registration Statement but were not. 31. Defendant Ma emphatically denied at the time of the IPO that Alibaba would undertake any untoward business practices to increase sales to the detriment of reputation, telling CNBC on September 19, 2014 that he had “always believe[d] that customer is number one, employee number two and shareholders are number three.” Refuting that he would ever take action to drive up stock prices to the detriment of customers, he told The Independent on September 22, 2014 that “[f]or me, the price, up and down, my people worry about that. I want to make the customer happy.” On September 17th he told Charlie Rose: “I have said on numerous occasions that we will put ‘customers first, employees second and shareholders third.’ I can see that investors who - 9 -

Description:
Jan 28, 2015 (“SEC”) filings by Alibaba Group Holding Limited (“Alibaba” or the “Company”), as well as . The roadshow used to sell the IPO took place, in large part, in the borough of Manhattan. 1200 Ashwood Parkway, Suite 410.
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